The cartoon demonstrates why Dems are pushing so hard for “free” tuition to public colleges. It provides them a chance to indoctrinate even people that clearly do not belong in college if they can lure them to Cupcake State Community College with “free tuition.”

Mr. Branco has succinctly distilled the essence of contemporary academia, in which allegedly hallowed halls of learning and ostensible open-minded inquiry have been turned into nothing more than Leftist indoctrination camps, devoted to churning out new, increasingly intolerant jackboots every year.

If there is another angle to this phenomenon, it is that, in actuality, the indoctrination process can be said to begin even earlier than at the college level, in elementary school and in high school.

Syndicated columnist Reuben Navarrette, by no means a fan of Trump, whose administration he refers to as a national nightmare, makes this observation in today’s column.

The Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave is now the Land of the Aggrieved and the Home of the Picked On.

This transformation is much more important than the question that captivates the attention of the left and the media (as if there were a difference at this point). Do we have a white supremacist in the White House?

A lot of my Latino and African-American friends are convinced we do. But I think they’re wrong. What do they know? Some of them said the same thing about every Republican president since Ronald Reagan while turning a blind eye to outright racists in the Democratic Party. Also, Donald Trump has been in the public eye for more than 30 years — donating money to civil rights groups, posing for pictures with Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, and supporting Democrats. I personally never heard anyone say he was a racist or white supremacist until he became a Republican. That smells fishy.